A showdown is comprised of a series of contests that happen *prior* to The Shot.

Basically, there's a list of preamble maneuvers people can go through; each side of the showdown gets a chance to call for one or more of the contests to occur prior to the shot going off. If only one of the two sides chooses a particular "step", that doesn't matter; the step happens. Steps that neither side are interested in get skipped (in other words, each side gets to choose how much tension-dial-twisting they wanna do prior to the shot happening).

This process steps outside of the attack and defend paradigm. When it comes down to The Shot, the loser doesn't get his shot off. (Or, if he does, it's after all results, consequences, taken-outs, etc, of the winner's shot are accounted for; I'll talk about that below.)

Think of the showdowns in Westerns like Sam Raimi's The Quick and the Dead or the finale of Sergio Leone's The Good, The Bad & The Ugly. Each step is a tight shot on some feature of the preamble: a close shot of the eyes — either of determination or fear; the face of the clock, with each second ticking down, louder than the last; a hand poised over the handle of a gun, fingers flexing, knuckles cracking. Each of those shots is a contest — you're slowing time down and making it crazy tense.

Here's how it works:

ONE: The Staredown

The image: Tight focus on the eyes of each opponent.

The questions: Who's the badass here? Who has the fear, and who doesn't?

The maneuver: Intimidation vs. Intimidation if both are trying to shake each other's nerves. Whoever wins the roll gets to place a temporary aspect, e.g., "He's tougher'n me!" or "Shaken!", on his opponent.

Options: Something like Resolve may be rolled instead by one side in this maneuver if that side is choosing *not* to "counter-intimidate", getting the full defense bonus (+2). If the defender in such a case succeeds, he does not get to place a temporary aspect on his opponent, but he may gain Spin if he wins by more than 3, to affect the next roll he makes by +1.

The questions: Whose hands will move a split second faster than the other's?

The maneuver: This is about making the most of your reaction speed; it's like "aiming" to shoot a gun, only you're "preparing" to draw it instead. This is a maneuver of Guns vs. Guns. Whoever wins the roll places a temporary aspect on his opponent, e.g., "Slow on the draw!" or "Hand cramp!"

Options:Other skills could potentially be brought to bear if someone can make a reasonable case that a different skill is at the root of their efforts to prepare for the draw — if a different weapon (swords, for example) is being used, the Weapon skill would feature, rather than Guns.

THREE: The Tick of the Clock

The image: The second hand ticks closer to high noon, each tick of the clock resounding, louder than the last, echoing, isolated.

The questions: Who will hear the start of the first chime of high noon first?

The maneuver: This is about making sure that your perceptions are more keenly attuned than the other guy's: Alertness vs. Alertness. The winner of this maneuver places a temporary aspect either on his opponent or himself, e.g., "Can't hear over the beat of my heart" on an opponent or "I can hear the gears turn in the clock!" on yourself.

FOUR: The Draw

The image: BONG. Reach for those guns and get 'em out!

The questions: Who got his gun out first?

The maneuver: Guns vs. Guns (or Weapons vs. Weapons), the winner placing a temporary aspect again. Different skills might be used if they're more indicative of speed of motion. For example, someone might have very fast hands but be a crappy shot, preferring to use their Sleight of Hand skill here.

FIVE: The Shot

The image: A shot rings out — perhaps two. Both duellists jerk back. We can't tell what happened!

The questions: Who got hit? Whose shot went wide?

The maneuver: This is Guns vs. Guns, but done as a "simultaneous attack", where the winner is the one who hits his target, and the loser's roll treated as a defense, his shot going wide. All the free tags resulting from the previous maneuvers can be used, stacked on top of each other, as much as can be done, to amp up the stress dealt by the winner's shot as much as possible. Whoever's roll is highest gets his shot off, hitting the other guy for as much stress as is the margin of success.

Options: If the showdown hasn't ended conclusively, it reverts to a standard combat at this point. All temporary aspects from previous maneuvers remain in play (but their free tags may be used up at this point), so they might still factor in…

This system can be used for swords as well (think of the scene in Hero where the combatants play out the entire duel in their heads, neither one moving until a single strike….).